What are the weak spots on the NFC East rosters?

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Dallas Cowboys quarterback Dak Prescott (4) looks to pass under pressure from New York Giants defensive ends Olivier Vernon (54) and Romeo Okwara (78) during the Dallas Cowboys vs. the New York Giants NFL football game at MetLife Stadium in East Rutherford, New Jersey on Sunday, December 11, 2016. (Louis DeLuca/The Dallas Morning News)

The NFC East has long been a division of parity, with no team repeating as division champs since the Eagles won four in a row from 2001-2004. With so much turnover from year to year, the key to winning the East might just be in exploiting weaknesses on opposing teams.

NFL.com's Gregg Rosenthal recently broke down each NFC team's weak spot on the depth chart. And for the Cowboys, two areas stood out -- defensive back and defensive line.

"There are no easy answers to Dallas' defensive woes on the roster, other than coordinator Rod Marinelli's penchant for coaching up lackluster talent with fundamentals and hustle," Rosenthal wrote. "Adding first-round pick Taco Charlton won't be enough to fix a pass rush missing suspended players (David Irving and Randy Gregory) or players with injury concerns like DeMarcus Lawrence and Tyrone Crawford. Dallas' underrated secondary covered for the team's faulty front last season, but that will be far more difficult after an offseason exodus of four key free agents in the back end."

That lack of talent on defensive line may not be an issue against the Giants, as Rosenthal sees offensive line as the biggest weakness on New York.

"This is a roster of extremes. There are position groups that rank among the best in football (wide receiver, defensive line, secondary) and position groups that rank among the shakiest (offensive line, linebacker, Eli Manning truthers and running back)," Rosenthal observed. "Ultimately, the entire season could come down to whether young tackles Ereck Flowers and Bobby Hart reward their organization's undying faith."

Meanwhile, he views the Eagles' biggest weak spot as their group of cornerbacks.

"Defensive coordinator Jim Schwartz will have earned his money if this group performs adequately," Rosenthal wrote. "The team essentially only returns Jalen Mills and Ron Brooks as key pieces and will need journeyman Patrick Robinson and rookie third-round pick Rasul Douglas to play quality snaps, or the whole secondary could fall apart."

And it looks like the Cowboys could really push around Washington's defensive line in their two matchups this season.

"The team's D-line makeover came off as confusing, at least until first-round pick Jonathan Allen came along," he wrote of Washington. "The Redskins let their best player walk away, then threw a lot of money at role players in Stacy McGee and Terrell McClain who weren't exactly coveted by their old teams. The nose tackle spot, led by another castoff, Ziggy Hood, is also part of a group that could get pushed around."